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The object temperature was then read from a scale on the pyrometer.
Watching the pyrometers is part of the pilot's job.
A pyrometer has an optical system and a detector.
He was elected to the Royal Society in 1783 for the development of a pyrometer.
To get around these difficulties, the ratio or two-color pyrometer was developed.
Since the competition is the market leader in radiation pyrometers it attracts a low score.
He also published a piece on a pyrometer in the first edition of the magazine in 1774.
The glass will remain in the closed kiln until the pyrometer reads room temperature.
"The electrical lead to my glass pyrometer rod must have shorted.
During its flight or upon impact the sample can be characterized with instruments such as cameras and pyrometers.
"The pyrometer's on the red, and the oven's hot," and the man left his bench.
Seaton crowded on power until Crane, reading the pyrometers, warned him to cut back the skin was getting too hot.
Pyrometer a temperature indicator linked to a kiln via a thermocoupler.
He also described a pyrometer that measured the expansion of a small amount of air held within a gold bulb.
He scowled at his telemetering pyrometers and grumbled, "Not a flicker!
He watched the hull pyrometers, but the tough alloy could stand an amazing amount of atmospheric friction.
In 1904, Professor Bristol invented the first practical pyrometer for measuring high temperatures.
Pyrometer indication of tube lining very satisfactory.
Two-color ratio pyrometers cannot measure whether a material's emissivity is wavelength dependent.
Seaton glanced at his pyrometer.
A pyrometer is a non-contacting device that intercepts and measures thermal radiation, a process known as pyrometry.
Ratio pyrometers are essentially two brightness pyrometers in a single instrument.
The word pyrometer comes from the Greek word for fire, "πυρ" (pyro), and meter, meaning to measure.
The potter Josiah Wedgwood invented the first pyrometer to measure the temperature in his kilns.
The operational principles of the ratio pyrometers were developed in the 1920s and 1930s, and they were commercially available in 1939.